Jodi Kantor's rich investigation into the gender dynamics of Harvard Business School in The New York Times is meant to leave you with the impression that men and women fare very differently at this elite training ground. In 2009, only 14 percent of women landed at the top of the class, compared to 36 percent of men. Women were less likely to speak up in class and even female professors, of whom there were few, felt intimidated and hassled by male students.
Still, my takeaway from Kantor's piece is that men and women at Harvard Business School have a lot more in common with one another than they do with everyone else in the world.
This is a place where students drive luxury cars and host decadent parties and speak of themselves in terms of their "social cap," as if they were human derivatives. The median salary on graduation is $120,000 (and that's before the signing bonus), and the differences in starting wages between men and women are minimal.
The background to Kantor's story is that Harvard has set up a very particular definition of success - now we're just trying to figure out whether women can or want to fit into it.
Harvard Business School exists at the intersection of academia and finance. In academia, women have made relatively easy and consistent gains over men for the past 40 years; now three women earn a college degree for every two men, and more women earn graduate degrees. But in finance women have made very little progress.
So Harvard launched an experiment in gender equity, with the business class of 2013 as the guinea pigs. In 2010, Drew Gilpin Faust, the university's first female president, hired a dean who launched an ambitious initiative to change the business school culture by monitoring how students spoke, providing private coaching, and doing away with the case study model in favor of a more collaborative approach.
By the end of the two years, the grade gap between men and women had vanished, and women were winning more academic awards. But the ultrawealthy frat boys of "Section X" still existed and and hassled the female professors.
As one founder of a venture capital firm told a woman who asked him how women could get into the field: "Don't." The male partners don't want women there, and this guy was doing them a favor by warning them. Gender equity experiments apparently can't eradicate jerks.